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Thursday, December 28, 2017

“A collection of short stories dealing with different kinds of scars
we keep. They never said being human could be this hard. They never told us
about the scars we would carry. They only told us that this is what it means to
be alive.”

Author:

Mohy Omar says he’s been writing all his life, but this collection is
his first shot at publishing.

Appraisal:

A small collection of three short stories of about 3,000 words each.
To say they are different would be both true and, I think, a compliment. The
first one, about death, or life, or maybe both (I’ll let you decide) should
trigger a bit of reflection on those subjects. A solid effort from a new
author.

Tuesday, December 26, 2017

Jake Kendrick is a brilliant negotiator, even though—or maybe because—he's only three and a half feet tall. When a substance is discovered which holds the promise to end world hunger, Jake seems the perfect person to secure the rights from the diminutive Amazonian chief who claims to hold the only supply.

Author:

Alexes Razevich was born in New York and grew up in Orange County, California. She attended California State University San Francisco where she earned a degree in Creative Writing. After a successful career on the fringe of the electronics industry, including stints as Director of Marketing for a major trade show management company and as an editor for Electronic Engineering Times, she returned to her first love--fiction. She lives in Southern California with her husband. When she isn't writing, she enjoys playing hockey and travel.

She would love to have you join her on Twitter and get to know you on Facebook.

Appraisal:

This is the most unusual novel I’ve read this year. A story within which anything is possible and little is as it seems. The author kept me unbalanced and on edge throughout, and I enjoyed the ride.

A minimalistic plot gives the main character an overriding purpose to keep moving forward through seemingly insurmountable odds, and this frees the author to delve into a world of the real and the imaginary. For me, the reading pleasure came through the fascinating metaphysical backdrop that draped every character and event—eerily believable and richly detailed. Try this for a descriptive sentence: “Purple orchids burst through the fat green leaves like tethered birds aching to take flight,” or this for mood setting: “Drizzle fell, as soft as kisses on his skin.” I highlighted quite a few more.

A few loose ends remained untied at the conclusion, but I didn’t feel cheated. This story was about the journey not the plot. A bit like an acid trip, there’s little to be gained by explaining what went on, you have to experience it for yourself. I’d strongly recommend reading the Amazon sample. If you enjoy how the story starts, I don’t think you’ll regret reading through to the end.

Friday, December 22, 2017

“In You. I. Us, Annalisa
Crawford captures everyday people during poignant defining moments in their
lives: An artist puts his heart into his latest sketch, an elderly couple
endures scrutiny by a fellow diner, an ex-student attempts to make amends with
a girl she bullied at school, a teenager holds vigil at his friend’s hospital
bedside, long distance lovers promise complete devotion, a broken-hearted widow
stares into the sea from the edge of a cliff where her husband died, a grieving
son contacts the only person he can rely on in a moment of crisis, a group of
middle-aged friends inspire each other to live remarkable lives. Day after day,
we make the same choices. But after reading You.
I. Us., you’ll ask yourself, ‘What if we didn’t?’”

Author:

“Annalisa Crawford lives in Cornwall UK, with a good supply of
moorland and beaches to keep her inspired. She lives with her husband, two
sons, a dog and a cat.”

As the description says, each of these short stories focus on
“everyday people during poignant defining moments in their lives.” Sounds
serious, doesn’t it? And some of them are. But I found my emotions or reaction
to the stories were more varied than that. Some got a laugh, maybe a
sympathetic laugh or an I’m-glad-that-isn’t-me laugh, but still a laugh. While
some stories are better than others, none are bad and your list of the best and
worst would be different than mine. These are the kind of stories that which
ones resonate with you are going to be dependent on your attitudes and
experiences as much as the character’s. Those who like short stories and
characters who feel real life, you’ll find plenty to like in this collection.

Wednesday, December 20, 2017

This book is described on Kindle as ‘A Historical Fiction Mystery
& Suspense Novel Da Vinci Code meets Indiana Jones!’. There is plenty of
room for good books in the ‘history and mystery’ genre. It gives nothing away
to say that we are revisiting that most complex of Renaissance men, Leonardo da
Vinci, and the Priory of Sion who are both guarding and leaving clues to an ancient
secret.

Author:

Here is a link to the website of our Phil Philips. http://philphilips.com/about-the-author/ (There
is another Phil Philips who writes for children: he is not our Phil Philips).
Our Phil Philips lives in Sydney, Australia and his background is in digital
graphic design. He considers himself a modern Renaissance man having an
interest in ‘anything and everything’. He strives to create art in everything
he does, be it a magazine layout, a painting in oils or writing a thriller. His
writing style has, apparently, been compared to James Patterson and Matthew
Reilly. He has published two books. Mona
Lisa’s Secret is his second. The protagonist – Joey Peruggia - also carries
the first book, but this book stands alone just fine.

Appraisal:

The book follows Dan Brownian paths. There is plenty of violence
(although fortunately nobody loses body parts: I parted company with Dan Brown
at that point in The Lost Symbol). There is plenty of historical stitching holding the
story together (the Mona Lisa really was stolen in 1911): familiarity with Dan
Brown’s tropes is taken as read, but is easy enough to catch up with should you
be a history and mystery fan who has never read Dan Brown (you may be the only
one …). The action moves from luxury in Los Angeles, to Paris, to the Jura
mountains to Cyprus and back to Paris: the author has been to these places and takes
pains to spice his scenes with local flavour.

There is plenty of meat to the plot, which is based on some
fascinating historical facts with some whopping great ‘what ifs’ added. Who
does not enjoy a good ‘what if’? The bigger the better!

There are a few unfocussed and/or unnecessary descriptive passages;
the violence becomes a little wearying for this reader (although the hero’s
escapes are most inventive); and a number of small tautologies (eg ‘the sink
basin’) irritate slightly. There are a couple of plot holes. And I can just
imagine what my Cypriot friends would say if they heard Cyprus described as ‘a
small Greek island’ (we Europeans view the Med rather differently).

Despite the occasional fuzzy focus, the book gallops along like a
horse just on the right side of bolting.

A fun collection of longer short stories (the longest actually novelette length) with very little in common except they’re all good and the holiday season has some role in each. Some have a supernatural or paranormal element. Some have characters from one of the author’s novels, although I never felt I needed backstory about those characters to understand or enjoy the story.

I considered singling out stories that stood out as especially good or different than the others and realized I couldn’t. Genres run the gambit from a cozy mystery (Helen Smith’sReal Elves, featuring characters from her Emily Castles series) to what might be described as a psychological thriller in Barbra Annino’sThe Perfect Gift. There are a couple stories where Santa Claus needs some help (Krampus Klausby Christiana Miller and J.R. Rain’sThe Santa Call). The possibility of budding romance on Chinese New Year in Heather Massey’sFortune Cat’s Visithas a lesson about giving that, while the story wasn’t about Christmas, might have captured the spirit of the season best of all.

Friday, December 15, 2017

Convicted of murder, and with nothing left to live for, Michael
commits suicide in his jail cell in 1977, then opens his eyes in 1966, in his
eight-year-old body, all memories of his previous life intact.

His first thoughts are of the dark intentions of his father. When the
man who raised him once again tries to do the unthinkable, Michael has a chance
to right his childhood's greatest wrong. But, can he do that without becoming a
killer all over again?”

Author:

“Have you ever noticed how almost every author on Amazon is both a ‘bestselling’
and ‘award winning’ author? Well, so is Shawn Inmon. He once dominated the
Lithuanian Clog Dancing Romance category for two heady days back in 2013. He
also was named third runner up in Mrs. Marsh's third grade spelling bee in
1968. Somewhere, he still has the certificate to prove it. Although he has
never matched either of these two career highlights, he keeps plugging away.

Shawn hails from Mossyrock, Washington--the setting for his first two
books, Feels Like the First Time, and
Both Sides Now.

He is a full-time author who lives in picturesque Seaview, Washington
on the Pacific Ocean.”

Appraisal:

This book is being billed as the second in the “Middle Falls Time
Travel series.” The first, The Unusual
Second Life of Thomas Weaver, had as its protagonist a character who died
and found himself in a new life, kind of. He’d wake up as the same person,
taken back in time to when he was a kid, but with all the knowledge of what
he’d done in his past life or lives. Maybe a better term would be a “do over.”
In that book Thomas had a classmate, Michael Hollister. If you’ve read the book
you’ll know Michael wasn’t a very nice person. In fact, he was Oregon’s most
prolific serial killer.

With that introduction to Michael you might wonder how he could
possibly redeem himself. But when Michael finds a way to “end it all” while in
prison, then wakes up in his boyhood bed in his boyhood home he’s smart enough
to recognize the chance he’s been given. That’s the easy part. The hard part is
figuring out what to do differently this time around.

The author does a masterful job of taking a character that was
irredeemable to those who read the prior book and somehow redeeming him. Not
excusing him for the crimes he committed in his past life, but helping us to
understand how he got to that point and drawing us into the story so that we were
pulling for Michael to find a different path for his life the next time around.
The premise of the books in this series of being given another chance is an
interesting mind exercise that makes for entertaining books. Well done, Mr.
Inmon.

Wednesday, December 13, 2017

“From Archimedes’ bathtub to Schrödinger’s cat, the reader follows the
dramatic and humorous events in the history of the ongoing struggle to
understand the basic nature of matter and, in the process, painlessly absorbs
all the major concepts of middle school physical science.

The structure of the book takes advantage of the fact that basic
concepts about the nature of matter were discovered in roughly the same
sequence they are taught. The book begins with the ancient Greeks, who first
talked about atoms from a viewpoint that was more philosophical than
scientific. The story of the next 2,000 years highlights the events and
characters in the history of the study of matter. The book ends on the note
that all the knowledge we have gained has led us back to asking philosophical
questions such as, “Why does matter exist?” The tone is one of whimsy,
weirdness, and irreverence. Although historical events are embellished or even
completely fabricated for comic effect, it is always clear that the science is
accurate. Adult readers will find this book thoroughly entertaining, but it can
also serve as a supplement to a middle school physical science class. It should
appeal to students who can’t get enough of science and to those looking for
something less boring than their textbook.”

Author:

George Graybill says he has “worked as a professional student,
oceanographer, bum, woodworker, research chemist, chemistry teacher, and
science writer in that order.” Graybill has written everything from magazine
articles and science textbooks to questions for standardized tests. You can
find out more on his blog.

Appraisal:

The author lays out his goal for this book at the very beginning. He
wants to mix interesting stories, jokes, and actual scientific facts in such a
way that it is both educational and entertaining. As he put it, “It will be
like eating ice cream that someone has secretly injected with vitamins.”

For the most part, I think he succeeds. I’m sure there are those who
will never get this stuff, but for those who are interested it can refresh your
memory about the stuff that you’ve forgotten. (I especially liked the
discussion of the scientific method and the discussion of the definition of
terms like theory and scientific law.) It will teach you things you might not
have learned. (I’ve had a vague understanding of Schrödinger’s cat, but don’t
think I’d ever understood the complete story of this famous feline before now.)

I’m not sure reading this is as good as ice cream, but it is pretty
darn entertaining. And yeah, I learned stuff without really trying. Give it a
try.

Monday, December 11, 2017

“A continuation of the beloved Christmas tale that quickly goes flying off in its own comic direction. It begins five years after dear old Ebenezer Scrooge has passed away and left his thriving firm to his former clerk, Bob Cratchit. However, Bob's overly-generous benevolence with lending and charity-giving has driven the company into the ground, on the verge of bankruptcy. And so the ghost of Scrooge returns one Christmas Eve to teach Cratchit the true meaning of money. Making the swirling journey through Christmases past, present, and yet-to-be all the more of a chaotic ride for Cratchit are the dozens of characters from other Dickens novels woven throughout the story, together for the first time. God bless them, most everyone.”

Author:

Robert J. Ellsworth is a native of Chicago who has written for a number of magazines, written screenplays (some for movies you might have seen,) non-fiction books, and is a two-time recipient of the Lucille Ball Award for comedy screenwriting.

Appraisal:

It may seem strange to compare a Christmas book to the book The Princess Bride (you’ve seen the movie even if you haven’t read the book, right?), but I’m going to, because A Christmas Carol 2 reminded me of this classic in multiple ways (I know the literati might not call it a classic, but I do).

The first similarity is the premise that the book was written by someone other than the author. The Princess Bride was claimed to have been written by S. Morgenstern with a story involving the author, William Goldman, having it read to him as a sick child, only to discover as an adult that there were boring parts, so he’d republished it in what, if memory serves me correctly, was originally referred to as “the good parts edition.” This book (or so the claim goes) was written by Charles Dickens with Robert J. Ellsberg providing some commentary via footnotes.

Another similarity is the humor, sometimes subtle, in both. For example, A Christmas Carol 2 inserts short (sometimes just two or three words) from other sources (often Christmas songs and other seasonal fare) in ways that work in the context of the story, while evoking the source. I’m not sure whether everyone would see these as humorous, but it tickled my funny bone. A few examples are saying “the weather outside was frightful” or describing someone as “a jolly, happy soul with a corncob pipe and a button nose.” A second, ongoing joke was the appearance of several characters from other Dickens’ books with footnotes explaining the reason for including this character, often including actual (made up) quotes of correspondence between Dickens and his editor.

At one point as reading I started wondering if the author was making a political statement with the subtext (it seemed to be headed that way), but in the end, I decided I was probably seeing things (sometimes a cigar is just a cigar). If there was a message, it was one of moderation. I found this “sequel” to the beloved Christmas classic a fun read on many different levels.

Friday, December 8, 2017

BUYER BEWARE! Do NOT purchase this book if you are looking for any of
the following:

-Miracles

-Elves

-General merriment

-Religious undertones

-Impromptu group renditions of Christmas carols

-People playing in snow

-A feeling of warmth and/or fuzziness

-Rekindled romance

-Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer

-Santa*

-Joy

-That inner warmth that comes from giving someone the perfect gift

*Actually, Santa may make an appearance.”

Author:

The author of several novels, plus the co-author with Daniel Pitts of
several choose-your-own-adventure books, Rudolf Kerkhoven lives in the Vancouver,
British Columbia area. For more, visit his website.

Appraisal:

This is a Christmas story, kind of. It takes place on Christmas Eve,
so it must be.

This is a choose your own adventure (or path or whatever) book, kind
of. Adventure is singular, not plural.

But mostly this is satire. If you like dry humor… If you’re a bit of a
nerdy nitpicker… If you find that people can be confusing… then this book might
be satirizing you and I’d say puts you squarely in the target audience. If you
can’t laugh at yourself and all that jazz, right?

Yeah, that all describes me. I’ve got the Christmas spirit now. If it
describes you, this is the kind of book that will tickle your fancy. Or your
funny bone. (If you’re ticklish.)

Wednesday, December 6, 2017

“When a little girl's body is found in the woods, a once quiet town is shaken to its core as it deals with the aftermath in this short story collection.In these twelve stories connected by a terrible tragedy, grown-ups and children alike try put the pieces back together again without any easy answers.”

Author:

Mr. Crane is an indie author of slice-of-life short stories, a series of drabble collections, and a horror novella and novelette. He has also contributed to several short story anthologies with other indie authors. Mr. Crane lives in Illinois with his wife, two cats, and a chinchilla.

I have to say up front that I am a huge fan of Mr. Crane’s writing. I have read all of his works, even the ones he doesn’t like to talk about. I was excited to see him get back to writing another collection of slice-of-life stories. Pieces (stories) did not disappoint!

It is awesome the way each of these stories touch on the many different facets, fears, complications, and choices faced as both a child and in adulthood. Although the stories are complete read individually, every entry is made richer by the characters’ reactions to the tragic event that connects them together. Each one gets more personal as you learn details about who the missing girl is and what happened to her. It is perfect how it moves from the effects felt from hearing about the event, seeing it on TV, having it be located in your neighborhood, and ending up with the feelings of the missing girl’s best friend.

Here is how a few of the stories hit home for me. Dandyclean reminded me of the Beltway sniper attacks when everyone was suspicious of white box trucks in the area; also my dislike of door-to-door salespeople. In A Dangerous Place, I could hear my husband teasing me about being too connected with TV, the Internet, and my cell phone hyping all the tragic news and weather events. The ending was a big surprise for me! A Concerned Parentcaptures the difficult feelings parents must have about protecting and keeping their children safe while fostering independence. With all the abductions, murders, and shooting being reported, it’s not easy to keep thinking it won’t happen in my neighborhood. Vigilantes was a tough read… the emotions of what you would like to do, what you know is right, and how a personal experience can change your thinking. I felt that the author explored both the right and wrong with this situation and left it up in the air as to what might have happened.

Monday, December 4, 2017

“What if you could walk away from the pressures and stresses of
corporate life, and live outside of the routines and restrictions? What if you
could choose where you live on a daily basis, have a beach view on Monday and a
view of the mountains on Friday? What if, instead of trading your days and
weeks and years for a life deferred, you just went and lived that life right
now?

These were the questions Joe and Kait Russo asked themselves as they
faced endless corporate meetings, inconvenient business trips, and the crushing
stress of ‘making it.’ It all changed when Kait asked Joe, ‘What if we sold our
house and got an RV?’”

Author:

“In 2015 Joe Russo and his wife Kait quit their jobs, got rid of most
of their possessions to live their dream – travel and work for themselves.”

“Joe Russo grew up in the San Fernando Valley of Los Angeles. He's had
an eclectic career starting in video game design, TV production and finally a
10 year career in Product Development before he decided to quit it all.”

I’d heard of the Russos, Joe and Kait, a year or two ago. I had liked
their Facebook page and then forgot about them. Then a few weeks ago I noticed
a Facebook post which led to binge watching a bunch of their videos on YouTube,
some of which mentioned the book Joe had written that had just been released.
Getting a copy of the book was the obvious next step. I’m glad I did.

As you’ll read in the book (or even reading the full book description
on retail sites), the title of the book comes from advice Joe’s father gave him
on his deathbed, to “take risks, and have lots of children.” The point Joe’s
father was making, at least as I see it, is that the best things in life come
from taking an intelligent risk. Investigate, prepare as best as you can, and
then jump. The Russos did exactly that and this book takes us from their
initial idea of selling their house, buying an RV, and hitting the road, up to
taking the jump which I’ll define as pulling out on the highway in their new
home on wheels. The book chronicles this process well.

I can see this appealing to three distinct groups, from least to most
important. The first, readers of travel memoirs. While not much travel happens
in this book, this is billed as book one in a series and logically the future
volumes are going to chronicle the traveling The Russos have done since hitting
the road. Travel book readers should start with this first volume as the
foundation of understanding the history for future installments. The second
group are those who have dreamed of doing exactly what The Russos have done.
While everyone’s situation is different and therefore their decision making
process would be different, the specifics of the research, thinking process,
and decisions The Russos made would be good as a blueprint and to trigger ideas.
But the most important is as inspiration. If you’re considering taking a risk,
making that jump, the story of others who did that with good results may be
just the inspiration you need. It was for me.

Friday, December 1, 2017

“Divorced by a husband who wanted children more than her, Mary Bellamy has left behind the Boston suburbs for tiny Lawson, New Hampshire, where she must cope with attentions from an unhappily-married Episcopal priest who'd like to save her heathen soul, but is susceptible to more earthly temptations. She's also wooed by a handsome local cop, an excellent kisser who confuses her by being in favor of gay rights, but opposed to sex before marriage.

Soon Mary also faces a crushing job loss, a pregnancy that wasn't supposed to be possible, a scandalous secret she must keep even at the expense of all her hopes, and an ex-husband whose disintegration threatens all that she has left. In this witty and affectionate tale of small town life, Mary discovers that the connections we make can result in terrifying risks, as well as unexpected blessings.”

Author:

A native Floridian, Sandra Hutchison moved north during high school and has remained there. Currently she lives in Troy, NY with her family and teaches writing at Hudson Valley Community College.

Reading the book description I realized that everything it says about the things the main character Mary experiences are the kind of happenings that are common, or at least not rare. Surely you’ve known women who have received attention from a married man or a person whose beliefs contradict stereotypes - maybe even seem contradictory. We’ve all known people who have unexpectedly lost their job or women who have an unplanned pregnancy, even when they believed they weren’t capable of bearing children. And the scenario of someone going off-the-rails in the midst of a divorce, creating issues for their soon-to-be ex isn’t hard to imagine. I think I got drawn into Mary’s story so easily because I didn’t have to suspend disbelief for any of these things. That they happened all at once is the reason the expression “when it rains, it pours,” is now a cliché.

The Awful Mess was an engrossing, well written story. It’s made more so for being so easy to believe it could really happen. I just hope it doesn’t happen to anyone I know.

Some sex and adult themes. Also, as the author puts it on Amazon, “This book contains some religious themes, but if you require piety and reverence in such matters, this is not the book for you. Skeptics, you will probably be able to cope.”

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